By Michael Schaus
Wednesday, May 07, 2014
Cadillac came out with a new commercial. And the
Huffington Post hated it, so you know it’s pretty awesome. The ad is an homage
to America’s tradition of hard work – and a slam against European Socialism.
(Of course, it does this while selling, of all things, an electric hybrid.)
Huff Po immediately elected to decry the ad… Because if the Liberal media’s penchant
for business has taught us anything, it’s that earning money isn’t the “most
important” thing.
Now, prepare yourself to be motivated for a few more
hours at the office (and this is coming from a guy who hates electric cars
almost as much as he hates Cadillac): YouTube link.
Wow… An American car company exercising the American idea
that you can earn anything you want (including a Cadillac ELR – if you’re into
that sort of thing) with a little dreaming and elbow grease… Clearly this is a
horrible message to send to the masses. Huff Po decided to begin their trashing
critique of the ad in the following manner:
There are plenty of things to celebrate about being American, but being possessed by a blind mania for working yourself into the ground, buying more stuff, and mocking people in other countries just isn't one of them.
Let’s be honest: We really only mock the French. It might
be safe to point out that no-one enjoys the prospect of 40 plus hours per week
of the “daily grind”. (For those of you who are liberal, unemployed, or French,
the “daily grind” refers to “work”.) But, c’mon… When did we start knocking
hard work in this country? I kinda thought that was what was supposed to earn
you that Rockefeller bank account. Don’t we like the guy that works his tail
off to provide his kids with a backyard pool? (I guess I forgot that we live in
a world that clamors for a $15 per-hour minimum wage.)
Huff Po went on to describe the American car maker’s ad
as being:
a completely shameless celebration of our work-hard-buy-more culture, with a blanket dismissal of ‘other countries’ and their laziness tossed in for good measure.
Shameless? Really? I always thought that aspirations for
a better life, through hard work and tireless hours, was what the American
dream was all about. But the Huffington continued on:
"Why aren't you like that?" he [Neil McDonough] says. "Why aren't we like that? Because we're crazy, driven, hard-working believers, that's why." By this point, the ad has already become little more than a parody of itself, but we had to ask: believers in what? The pursuit of "stuff."
Um… Like it or not, “stuff” is kinda responsible for
driving the economy. In fact, it is the economy. Even the very liberal Paul
Krugman is under the impression that people buying stuff will help other people
earn more money to buy stuff of their own. So what is wrong with McDonough
spending his money purchasing stuff from people with other stuff for sale? Or
are we all supposed to disregard the antiquated notion of hard work, and wait
for government to redistribute McDonough’s stuff to people who are
under-stuffed, so that they don’t have to work for their stuff? (Wow… This just
turned into a [profanity laced] George Carlin sketch.) Oh, and by the way,
what’s wrong with being “believers”? Did I miss a meeting with the re-writing
of Americanism?
The Mad Men who pitched Cadillac their endlessly ‘merican
idea made another mistake, according to the Huffington Post: They referenced
the glory-days of the Space Race. (Ya know… When the Soviet model of “work less
– make more” failed to win the race to the moon.)
The other reason for America's superiority, according to Cadillac? Our unrivalled space exploration program ("We're the only ones going back up [to the moon]," the ad boasts). Nevermind the fact that the U.S. government is now paying Russia $70 million a pop to shuttle NASA astronauts to the International Space Station.
Alright… Valid point. Of course our beloved
anti-work-liberal-rag fails to mention that our astronauts are currently
hitching rides to the Russian controlled space-station because their
Stuff-Redistributor-in-Chief (Obama) grounded our shuttles. “Look! We got to
the moon first, and we are leading the way in space exploration! … Now can we
treat Russia like some overpriced space-cabbie so we can study the impact
zero-gravity has on the scent of flowers?” (Really… That was an actual study.
Yes, we have fallen far from the days of Alan Shepard hitting golf balls off
the face of our lunar satellite.)
Of course, the Huffington Post wasn’t quite done with
their incredulous (and self-righteous) critique of Cadillac’s ode to hard work:
Now, the luxury car company is selling a vision of the American Dream at its worst: Work yourself into the ground, take as little time off as possible, and buy expensive sh*t (specifically, a 2014 Cadillac ELR).
Hey, Huff Post: How else are you supposed to afford a
pool, 2.5 kids, a huge kitchen, tailored suit, and a $75,000 Cadillac?
Subsidies? (I acknowledge that inheritance is an option… But, let’s face it:
Hard work even earned the Kennedy’ their fortune. Although, it was earned
illegally and is currently being wasted by liberal elites who disdain
everything about “work”.)
See, according to the Huff Po, we’re supposed to disdain
the idea of hard work and well-earned reward. Apparently, the only people
worthy of pools, ELR’s, and expensive suits, are trust fund babies who land
some comfy internship on the East Coast, where they learn how to spend other
people’s money. Of course, I’m sure they get that Chevy Volt (a liberal-elite
status symbol cleverly designed as a spontaneously combustible electric vehicle)
because they have to have it. After all, what else will they brag about when
they go to that cocktail fundraiser for Bill de Blasio’s most recent
“progressive” cause?
Liberals aren’t infuriated with overpriced stuff. (How
else do you explain Urban Outfitters?). The real problem Huffington Post has
with the commercial is their glamorization of “hard work”. (Which makes sense
if you are familiar with the HP's journalistic sloppiness.) Didn’t we used to
live in a world that praised “hard work”? Since when did the accumulation of
wealth (and *gasp* STUFF!) become a sin?
Of course, this kinda explains the tax theory behind
Democrat budgets… The progressive tax is really just a “sin tax”…One
commentator on the YouTube video unwittingly dismantled the Huffington Post
objection with a strangely liberal comment:
I'd take more vacation any-day over a Cadillac.
Good for you, YouTube commenter… And enjoy your vacation
at some un-known resort during “coupon week.” The rest of us are going to work
our tails off to give our kids a better life, our family a better vacation
(even if it is only two weeks in duration), and maybe even a bit more stuff… I
always thought America liked to earn luxury.
Keep up the easy work Huff Po. It suits you.
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